Shaw Hsiao-ling, right, wife of Greater Taichung Mayor Jason Hu, yesterday visits the home of corporal Hung Chung-chiu, who died of heatstroke on July 4, to offer condolences to Hung’s mother, left.

Photo: CNA

The vice commander of the army’s 542nd Brigade, Colonel Ho Chiang-chung (何江忠), was yesterday detained over his alleged role in the July 4 death of army corporal Hung Chung-chiu (洪仲丘).

The Ministry of National Defense said the Military High Court at 10:40am granted military prosecutors’ request to detain Ho. Ho is the first senior military official to be detained over Hung’s death.

The ministry said Ho was suspected of using his position of authority to force other brigade officers to have Hung punished with confinement a few days before he was set to be discharged from the military.

Ho is alleged to have committed offenses to personal liberty by a public authority, the offense of coercion by a public authority — both included in the Criminal Code — and the offense of punishing military personnel with categories of punishment not included in the regulations of the Armed Forces Criminal Act (陸海空軍刑法).

The ministry said military prosecutors believe Ho may collude with others and might destroy evidence if he were allowed to remain at liberty.

Senior military prosecutor Major General Tsao Chin-sheng (曹金生) said on Monday that Hung was placed in confinement after senior officers coerced subordinates into carrying out the punishment.

Hung, 23, was serving in the army’s 542nd Brigade in Hsinchu County and was due to be discharged on July 6. He was transferred to the 269th Brigade in Taoyuan on June 28 for disciplinary action after he brought a smartphone with a camera onto the base without permission when returning from vacation on June 23.

After being released from confinement on July 3, Hung suffered heat exhaustion during a training session on July 3 and was sent to a military hospital in Taipei.

Hung died at the hospital of multiple organ failure after efforts to resuscitate him failed.

Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Legislator Hsiao Bi-khim (蕭美琴), who is the convener of the legislature’s Foreign Affairs and National Defense Committee, said she had invited committee members to visit the detention facility in Yangmei Township (楊梅), Taoyuan County, where Hung died.

“I arranged the inspection to assess Hung’s situation while in confinement and to better understand the management and the environment of the military’s confinement system,” she added.

DPP Chairman Su Tseng-chang (蘇貞昌) said President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九), as commander-in-chief, must offer a clear explanation of the case as it is “not just the a death of a soldier, but a serious loophole and defect of the Taiwanese military.”

DPP Legislator Chen Ting-fei (陳亭妃) urged the ministry at a press conference yesterday to make the findings of its investigation into Hung’s death public within three days, adding that there were at least eight questionable areas in the case, among them missing surveillance video recordings and the logic behind Hung’s unit’s heavy training session.

While public outrage has been directed at the missing video footage, which should have shown how Hung was disciplined and how his supervisors reacted after he collapsed, Tsao told a press conference that the location where Hung was taken ill on July 3 was not covered by surveillance cameras, so there was no footage available.

The surveillance video recordings of Hung’s unit’s training session on July 1, of which an 80-minute section reportedly went missing, has been submitted to the Ministry of Justice’s Bureau of Investigation for examination, Tsao said.